If the fees are mandatory, they should be included in the hotel's base room rate. As it works now, these fees are yet another case of "split pricing," or as the FTC calls them, "drip pricing."

"Stop hotels from hiding part of their true prices from consumers and business travelers." That's the message Kevin Mitchell of the Business Travel Coalition and I sent to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on Aug. 27, 2012. Our target, of course, is the mandatory "fees" that hotels add to the room rates they post as supposedly independent fees rather than as integral parts of their true prices. The most common are "resort," "housekeeping," and "Internet access" fees, but business travel columnist Joe Sharkey recently identified mandatory fees for grounds-keeping and a "bell captain" fee.

Our objection to these fees is simple: If they're mandatory, they should be included in the hotel's base room rate. As it works now, these fees are yet another case of "split pricing," or as the FTC calls them, "drip pricing." You know how it works: A hotel that wants to collect, say, $200 a night for a room, instead posts a phony rate of $170 a night, then adds one or more mandatory fees to make up the $30 difference. The problem, of course, is that it's the phony $170 price the hotel posts online and submits to the online pricing sites; you don't find out about the true $200 price until later — maybe not until you've made a nonrefundable purchase. Hiding the fees from their initial price displays, even when shown before final purchase and sometimes not even then, is clearly deceptive. A related deception is failure to include a value added tax (VAT) in displayed prices for European hotels.

The cost to hotels for groups and meetings has been on the rise in the U.S. in recent years. According to a report from hotel benchmarking company Kalibri Labs, the cost, if left unchecked, likely will double by 2022.

New York Sen. Chuck Schumer has asked the FTC to investigate whether the airline industry is data mining consumer personal information in order to charge them airfares based on things like income and purchasing behaviors.

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